Technically that would be an offense in the UK and US, and probably every other Western nation. Probably most all the rest of the nations, too.
Very minor, though. It's a threat, it might even be disturbing of the peace, but time, place and context will play a very large role in this.
Unless the guy literally disturbed a variety of people - like yelling this in a church or store or business - and had to be restrained from making good on his threat, then it's probably nothing a District Attorney (Or the UK equivalent) wants to touch.
Squawking
Cuba Gooding, Jr. shouts "Show me the money" in the 1996 film, "Jerry Maguire".
In the book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, everyone at the tea party shouts, "No room! No room!" when they see Alice approaching.
Alice feels frightened on several occasions in the book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.when she realises how much she's shrunk from fanning herselfwhen the White Rabbit shouts at her to fetch his gloves and fanwhen confronted by the enormous puppywhen she suddenly shrinks after nibbling the mushroomand when the Queen shouts at the Duchess while she's arm in arm with Alice
Rin was in the same team as Kakashi Hatake and Obito Uchiha in 'Kakashi Gaiden'. She is said to be Sakura Haruno's mother but I don't think she is. Rin and Sakura are very much the same in looks, abilities and also in the love triangle. Even though they share many things, their personalities are different, Sakura always sided with Sasuke and yelled at Naruto and beat him up all the time but Rin, she never shouts or beats up Obito and never took sides, even though she had a secret crush on Kakashi, she was never on his side.
The word 'shouts' is both a noun (shout, shouts) and a verb (shout, shouts, shouting, shouted). Examples: Noun: The shouts of the crowd were drowning out the speaker's words. Verb: The coach shouts instructions from the bench.
The possessive form of the plural noun shouts is shouts'.Example: We scanned the area to determine the shouts' origin.
The possessive noun is the citizen's shouts.
The possessive noun is the citizen's shouts.
Squawking
Squawking
The infinitive of shouted is "to shout" The present tense conjugations are as follows: I shout You shout One shouts He shouts She shouts They shout We shout
not that i know of i got a lot of shouts but i dont think i got all the shouts
shouts
Clamat.
imam
Shouts in latin is a verb..it would be clamo Present: Clamo Clamas Clamat Clamamus Clamatis Clamant